U.S. beef headed to China

The U.S. reached agreement with China to promote market access for American natural gas, financial services and beef that Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said was part of a broader effort to begin reshaping the trade relationship between the world’s two largest economies.

The agreement covers 10 areas where negotiators from the two sides have reached consensus, including agricultural trade and the issuance of both bond writing and settlement licenses to two qualified U.S. financial institutions. By mid-July, U.S. beef producers will have broader access to Chinese markets, while America will move forward on allowing the import of cooked poultry from China, according to a joint statement announcing the deal.

The statement didn’t appear to change access for Chinese companies to U.S. natural gas exports, but welcomed China to receive shipments and engage in long-term supply contracts with American suppliers. Ross said officials from Dow Chemical Co. gave assurances that increasing exports of natural gas wouldn’t harm the U.S. industry or consumers if sales remained less than 30 percent of total output.

“This will let China diversify, somewhat, their sources of supply and will provide a huge export market for American LNG producers,” Ross told reporters at a White House briefing on Thursday, using an acronym for liquefied natural gas.

The agreements, which grew out of a 100-day action plan announced during an April meeting between President Donald Trump and Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, appeared to build on or repeat some commitments that China has already made. Still, they represented the first negotiated pact on trade for Trump, who campaigned on promises to get tough on China on trade before softening his tone as he’s sought cooperation on North Korea.

The next step will be to hammer out a one-year plan that puts a timeframe on ticking off other items on each nation’s trade “wish list,” Ross said in a Bloomberg TV interview on Friday.

‘Not a Breakthrough’ Ker Gibbs, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, called the commitments a “good beginning” toward addressing several market-access issues, “but not a breakthrough.”

“We’d like to see the actions that go with the commitments,” Gibbs said in an emailed statement. “Past foot-dragging means we won’t celebrate until these promises are executed."

Chinese Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao, speaking at a briefing in Beijing to announce the agreements, deflected questions about details, repeatedly describing the measures as “balanced.”

“The 100-day China-U.S. economic plan is a plan of cooperation, a plan of actions and a plan of win-win arrangements,” Zhu said.

Payment CompaniesChina agreed to give “full and prompt market access” to payments companies, like Mastercard Inc., Visa Inc. and American Express Co. The U.S. brought a case against China on its electronic payment services market in 2010. After a World Trade Organization panel ruled against it in 2012, China issued new industry guidelines in 2015 that it said would clear the way for foreign firms.

Also in the plan, China agreed to allow foreign-owned firms to provide credit ratings by July 16. China’s Ministry of Commerce and National Development and Reform Commission had already proposed draft regulations in December that would have opened up that market. China will issue both bond underwriting and settlement licenses to two qualified U.S. financial institutions as well.

While Trump made the revival of America’s coal industry a hallmark of his campaign, his administration seems to be acknowledging the potential jobs bonanza offered by the two dozen applications under review to build LNG export terminals. Ross said a deal for coal exports to China wasn’t likely, given the far shipping distances. Gary Cohn, director of the National Economic Council, has voiced support for an LNG terminal in the U.S. Northwest that would ship gas to Asia.

China imports of U.S. liquefied natural gas picked up last year after Cheniere Energy Inc. launched the first in a wave of new plants designed to liquefy and export abundant U.S. shale gas. American supplies accounted for almost 7% of China’s total imports in March, customs data shows. Chinese companies already have long-term contracts with non-U.S. suppliers for more LNG than domestic demand requires through at least 2023, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

The Trump administration has given the go-ahead for a handful of proposed U.S. LNG ventures to ship their fuel to countries without free-trade agreements, such as China. Those projects need to secure long-term supply agreements to underpin their financing before construction can begin.

Market Sentiment“This will only help raise the market sentiment, but not change anything materially in the foreseeable future,” said Maggie Kuang, a Singapore-based analyst at BNEF.

Ross said the agreement would help to reduce the growing U.S. trade deficit with China -- the country’s largest, totaling $347 billion in 2016 -- and help lead to additional negotiations over the next year that could address other parts of the relationship.

“This was pretty much a herculean accomplishment to get this done,” he said. “This is more than has been done in the whole history of U.S.-China relations on trade.”

Beef, Poultry

The deal reaffirms a September agreement to reopen China to U.S. beef exports. This time, China promised to allow American beef into the country after one more round of technical consultations, and no later than July 16, according to the joint statement.

It also paves the way for China to export cooked poultry to the U.S. The U.S. will publish a proposed rule by July 16 to help jump-start the imports, it said.

Gai Xinzhe, a researcher at the Bank of China Ltd.’s Institute of International Finance in Beijing, said China appeared to offer more than the U.S., but called concessions “pretty even from both sides.”